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“The upward move in market expectations of where bank rate will head in future could, at the margin, feed into the effective financial conditions facing the real economy,” Carney said in a speech to business leaders in Nottingham, England Wednesday. “If they tighten, and the recovery seems to be falling short of the strong growth we need, we will consider carefully whether, and how best, to stimulate the recovery further.”

Carney introduced forward guidance this month to help the economic recovery, saying that policy-makers plan to keep the benchmark interest rate at a record low 0.5 per cent for at least three years. Indications of strengthening U.K. growth and the U.S. Federal Reserve’s signals it may begin trimming its monthly purchases have prompted investors to raise bets that rates will rise sooner and push up gilt yields.

“Our forward guidance was clear that, although we would not reduce the stimulus until the recovery is secure, we would if necessary provide more,” Carney said. “We are focused on doing what we can to reduce uncertainty and build resilience so that the recovery can be sustained despite the inevitable shocks ahead.”

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Carney’s comments Wednesday mark his first policy speech since he introduced guidance. Under the policy, the BOE plans to keep its benchmark rate unchanged until unemployment, currently 7.8 per cent, reaches 7 per cent. The BOE doesn’t see that happening until the end of 2016.

“Thinking unemployment will come down faster than we expect isn’t enough to believe interest rates will rise soon,” Carney said. The 7 per cent threshold is an opportunity for the Monetary Policy Committee to reassess policy and shouldn’t be seen as a trigger to raise rates, he said.

“We are giving confidence that interest rates won’t go up until jobs, incomes and spending are recovering at a sustainable pace,” he said. “Guidance provides you with certainty that interest rates will not rise too soon. Exactly how long they stay low will depend on the progress of the recovery.”

The yield on 10-year gilt due in September 2022 fell three basis points to 2.57 per cent before Carney’s remarks. It’s risen 21 basis points this month.

Carney also announced Wednesday that the BOE will relax liquidity rules on banks that meet capital requirements to help encourage lending and aid the economy.

While the recovery is showing signs of being “broad based and set to continue,” growth prospects for the U.K. “are solid not stellar,” he said. The BOE forecasts growth to average 2.5 per cent a year over the next three years, compared with an historical average rate of 2.75 per cent.

In addition, “a recovery in growth does not necessarily mean faster job creation and lower unemployment,” since a pickup in the U.K.’s “anemic” productivity growth could delay a drop in the jobless rate, he said.

While Carney noted the increase in interest-rate expectations, he said this may be partly due to more optimistic forecasts for the jobless rate. BOE projections show just a 1- in-3 chance unemployment will drop to 7 per cent by mid-2015. U.K. rate expectations also shouldn’t be guided by U.S. recovery prospects, according to Carney.

“The U.S. recovery is much further advanced,” he said. “While much has been made of the special relationship between the U.S. and U.K., it is not so special that the possibility of a reduction in the pace of additional stimulus in the U.S. warrants a current reduction in the degree of monetary stimulus in the U.K.”

The BOE’s new framework includes so-called knockouts linked to its 2 per cent inflation goal.

While Carney said underlying price pressure is “subdued,” inflation will face “bumps in the road” as it falls back over the next two years from 2.8 per cent.

“In these circumstances it would not makes sense to choke off the recovery by raising interest rates prematurely,” he said.

The BOE’s inflation mandate “has not changed,” and “I can also assure you of my personal commitment to price stability,” he said. “I certainly have no hesitation in raising interest rates when required.”

The central bank will use its “full suite of policy tools” to ensure a sustainable recovery, he said. That will include monitoring the housing market after some analysts said government measures to encourage demand may stoke a property bubble.

“The Bank of England is acutely aware of the risk of unsustainable credit,” he said. “We are now fully prepared” to use so-called macroprudential tools to contain risks.

The BOE will also ease liquidity rules for lenders that meet capital targets, Carney said. It will allow the main U.K. lenders to shrink their required holdings of low-yielding, easy-to-sell securities, such as government bonds, once they hold capital reserves equivalent to 7 per cent of their risk-weighted assets.

“That will help to underpin the supply of credit, since every pound currently held in liquid assets is a pound that could be lent to the real economy,” Carney said. “Taken together, our actions create not just a more resilient system, but also one more able to support and sustain a recovery by serving the real economy.”

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